Five Free Favourites #4

SFFaudio Online Audio

My name is Anne and I have been invited to write this guest post. Today I’ll be handing you Five of my Favorite Free podcasts. You can find more about the podcasts I like, on my podcast review blog “Anne Is A Man.” There you’ll see, I have a preference for history podcasts, so this is what I want to share with you today: my five hot history tips…

Five Free Favourites

Oh, and by the way, I am a man; the man called Anne – can you imagine? That has a history in itself. I am of Dutch origin, but even among that peculiar people Annes are mostly women. Just not me, and not my grand dad, whom I was named after. Stubborn, contrary people, from the north. I do not live there anymore, however. Nowadays I live in Israel. Israelis pronounce my name as Anna and there are no other men named Anna in Israel, I can assure you. It doesn’t get any better. So, after a life of explanations, I called my blog Anne is a Man!

1.
Webcasts BerkeleyHistory 5
My all time favorite History Podcast is a lecture series from Berkeley. They deliver it twice a year and publish it as a podcast. If you write a nice email to the GSI’s, they’ll share the power point with you and you can see the visuals, but without them, the lectures are no less intriguing. The course is called History 5 and consists of near 30 lectures telling European History from the Renaissance until today, or 1989 – as close as historians dare to venture to the present. If you take up the course you will either run into Professor Thomas Laqueur, the man who can hysterically giggle, or into Professor Margaret Lavinia Anderson, Peggy for short, who sounds like an American version of McGonnagall from Harry Potter – fair, but rigid and distant. Then again, this lecture she begins with: “I apologize for always talking about sex so much. I know it is nothing you are interested in, but in any case […] it would be an appropriate introduction to Freud.” And here you’ll hear stories of Freud and the nineteenth century in Europe, you wouldn’t believe.

Recommended |MP3|

2.
BBC Radio 4 Podcast In Our TimeIn Our Time
The second podcast is also an institutionalized production: BBC’s In Our Time. This radio programme is led by a member of the house of Lords, no less, Melvyn Bragg. He is accompanied each issue by three specialists from the field, to discuss a subject in this ongoing series about the history of thought. Right after the broadcast, the recording is put on-line as a podcast, but is removed the next week. If you want to listen from the archive, it can only be done in stream. There is a veritable multitude of streams I could point to, really, very nearly all of them are top notch history, philosophy and elite entertainment. But since I have to choose, let me point you to the issue about King Lear. This will not only relate to Shakespeare’s drama, but also to the folk tale of King Leir, that lay the basis to the story but was radically altered by the Renaissance playwright, with magnificent consequences, for drama, surprise and added depth to the plot.

Recommended: |RealAudio| (stream)
Podcast feed: http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/iot/rss.xml

3.
Historyzine: The History PodcastHistoryzine
So far so good with the podcasts that are not true podcasts, but recordings that were delivered as podcast on the side. Let’s move to the true, intended, amateur, dedicated podcasts and start with Historyzine. This history podcast is made by the Englishman Jim Mowatt, who has a preference for reenactments of historical battles and who uses the Historyzine podcast as a series to recount the ins and outs of the Spanish War of Succession – a power struggle in Europe that allegedly was about the throne of Spain, but deep down was about hegemony and confronted France’s Louis XIV with the English and the Dutch among others. Here is the first installment, I guess you can take it from there.

Recommended: |MP3|
Podcast feed: http://historyzine.com/feed/

4.
Binge Thinking HistoryBinge Thinking History Podcast
Another Brit to make a great history podcast in his spare time is Tony Cocks, of the Binge Thinking History Podcast. In nine podcasts he has covered two subjects so far. The first are the British roots of the American constitution and the second was the Battle of Britain. The last is the part of World War II of which Churchill said: ‘never so many owed so much to so few.’ But lately some debunking has been going on about this phrase. After Tony has talked us through the battle, he delivered an excellent episode, summing it all up and drawing the conclusions. Listen to find out whether he debunks the myth of the Battle of Britain with its few heroes as well.

Recommended |MP3|
Podcast feed: http://bingethinkinghistory.libsyn.com/rss

5.
The German Cultural History PodcastThe German Cultural History podcast
The last recommendation is one for the history die-hards. The German Cultural History podcast (and its related blog) is made by by an enthusiastic academic, who doesn’t care too much about sound quality and post-production. He just dives head-first into the subject and gets to the point. His breadth and depth are amazing and what he manages to put in in his approx 30 minute installments has got to be the definitive picture of Medieval German Culture. But you have to be ready to bear with him. Not only with the substandard sound, also with the tangents he takes on in his enthusiasm, especially when it is about the roots of the German language. Once, you open up for it, you really get something. In my opinion, sometime the less polished material, the rawer material, has a more accurate content or strikes as more genuine. The best episode (so far) is the one where the host takes us to Iceland, to Snorri Sturluson, to find the roots of Germanic paganism.

Recommended: |MP3|
Podcast feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/GermanCulturalHistory

Posted by Anne of the Anne Is A Man blog

New Releases – Allen M. Steele, James Patterson, Star Wars

New Releases

This story was nominated for a Hugo award and is part of the author’s popular “Coyote Trilogy”…

Science Fiction Audiobook - The Days Between by Allen M. SteeleThe Days Between
By Allen M. Steele; Read by Tom Dheere
1 CD – 72 minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: Infinivox
Published: July 2008
ISBN: 9781884612817
Three months after leaving Earth, the URSS Alabama had just achieved cruise velocity when the accident occurred: Leslie Gillis woke up. His first lucid thought was: Thank God, I made it. His next thought was: Something’s wrong. Everyone was still asleep. Everyone except himself. This story was nominated for a Hugo award and is part of the author’s popular Coyote Trilogy.
*The first 20 orders will receive a signed copy!

And, since when is James Patterson a YA novelist? Well, in audio, since now! He’s got three titles out…

The Dangerous Days Of Daniel X by James PattersonThe Dangerous Days Of Daniel X
By James Patterson; Read by Milo Ventimiglia
4 CDs – [ABRIDGED?]
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Published: July 2008
ISBN: 9781600242007
The greatest superpower of all isn’t to be part spider, part man, or to cast magic spells — the greatest power is the power to create. Daniel has that power. Daniel’s secret abilities — like being able to manipulate objects and animals with his mind or to recreate himself in any shape he chooses — have helped him survive. But Daniel doesn’t have a normal life. He is the protector of the earth, the Alien Hunter, with a mission beyond what anyone could imagine.

Maximum Ride - Book 1 by James PattersonMaximum Ride – (Book 1) The Angel Experiment
By James Patterson; Read by Evan Rachel Wood
4 CDs – [ABRIDGED]
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Published: July 2008
ISBN: 9781600242267
Fourteen-year-old Maximum Ride, better known as Max, knows what it’s like to soar above the world. She and all the members of the “Flock”–Fang, Iggy, Nudge, Gasman and Angel–are just like ordinary kids–only they have wings and can fly.

Maximum Ride - (Book 2) School’s Out by James PattersonMaximum Ride – (Book 2) School’s Out – Forever
By James Patterson; Read by Valentina de Angelis
4 CDs – [ABRIDGED]
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Published: July 2008
ISBN: 9781600242625
The Flock members are taken under the wing of an FBI agent and try to live “normal” lives by going to school, making friends–and continuing their relentless search for their parents.

Released in anticipation of the new Star Wars: The Clone Wars TV series and the new SW game….

Star Wars Audiobook - Star Wars: The Force UnleashedStar Wars: The Force Unleashed
By Sean Williams (based on a story by Haden
Blackman); Read by Jonathan Davis
5 CDs – 6 Hours [ABRIDGED]
Publisher: Random House Audio
Published: August 19th 2008
ISBN: 978073935808-5
The overthrow of the Republic is complete. The Separatist forces have been smashed, the Jedi Council nearly decimated, and the rest of the Order all but destroyed. Now absolute power rests in the iron fist of Darth Sidious–the cunning Sith lord better known as the former Senator, now Emperor, Palpatine. But more remains to be done. Pockets of resistance in the galaxy must still be defeated and missing Jedi accounted for . . . and dealt with. These crucial tasks fall to the Emperor’s ruthless enforcer, Darth Vader. In turn, the Dark Lord has groomed a lethal apprentice entrusted with a top-secret mission: to comb the galaxy and dispatch the last of his masters’ enemies, thereby punctuating the dark side’s victory with the Jedi’s doom.

Posted by Jesse Willis

Transmissions From Beyond – podcasting Interzone, Black Static and Crimewave stories

SFFaudio Online Audio

Transmissions From Beyond - the TTA Press podcastLongtime friend of SFFaudio, Paul S. Jenkins, alters us to the existence of the new TTA Press fiction podcast: Transmissions From Beyond. This podcast gets its stories from the pages of three TTA Press magazines:

Interzone (Science Fiction and Fantasy), Black Static (Horror), and Crimewave (Crime and Mystery). Their launch this month includes one story from each magazine! Check em out…

A Handful Of Dust by Ian R. FaulknerA Handful of Dust
By Ian R. Faulkner; Read by John Berlyne
1 |MP3| – Approx. 24 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Podcaster: Transmissions From Beyond
Podcast: August 2nd 2008
From Crimewave #9: Transgressions.


Lady Of The Crows by Tim CassonLady Of The Crows
By Tim Casson; Read by Paul S. Jenkins
1 |MP3| – Approx. 45 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Podcaster: Transmissions From Beyond
Podcast: August 2nd 2008
This story was published in Black Static #1.


The Algorithm by Tim AkersThe Algorithm
By Tim Akers; Read by John Berlyne
1 |MP3| – 53 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Podcaster: Transmissions From Beyond
Podcast: August 2nd 2008
From Interzone #212.

And, upcoming podcasts will include stories from authors: Greg Egan, Marion Arnott and Mercurio D. Rivera. Subscribe to the podcast via this feed:

http://www.transmissionsfrombeyond.com/feed

Posted by Jesse Willis

2 Classic Frederik Pohl tales narrated by Spider Robinson

SFFaudio Online Audio

Spider On The Web - Spider Robinson’s podcastSpider On The Web has some amazing content for us this month. Disappointed at the number of short stories available in audio form Spider Robinson has a plan to solve this. He’s sought out and received permission to read some of his favorite SF short stories. Stories from some of the most influential SF writers of all time! The first is what Spider Robinson describes as “what very well may be the ultimate science fiction short story.” Folks, he ain’t just blowing smoke with that line. Frederick Pohl’s 1966 short story Day Million is a real contender for that accolade! Influential as hell, short, amazing, stunningly futuristic and still modern (except in addressing its audience). A tale will blow your mind! The second story by Pohl, We Purchased People, first published in 1973, has even more taboos broken in it. In fact, far more taboos in are broken in We Purchased People than you can shake any unmentionable body part at. This one was entirely new to me, but upon reflection I think it may be just as powerful. Frankly, it’s more frightening than hell. Science Fiction as Horror.

Day Million and We Purchased People by Frederik PohlDay Million and We Purchased People
By Frederik Pohl; Read by Spider Robinson
1 |MP3| – Approx. 67 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Podcast: Spider On The Web
Podcaster: August 2008

Here’s the podcast feed:

http://www.spiderrobinson.com/iTunes_feed.xml

Posted by Jesse Willis

LibriVox: The Swoop! by P.G. Wodehouse

SFFaudio Online Audio

LibriVoxThe Swoop!, or How Clarence Saved England is a short comic novel by P G Wodehouse, first published in the UK in 1909. Its subtitle is “A Tale of the Great Invasion.” This one may strain the sub-genre of alternate history to its breaking point, but I figure its probably worth it. As hero, Clarence Chugwater (all of 14 years old), assisted by a band of Boy Scouts must halt the invasion of England! This is one of the many “invasion” novels written from the late 1870s to WWI. H.G. Wells’ The War Of The Worlds is one of these. Many others were written, most involving the invasion of England. This kind of book was even more popular, in its time, as all the vampire and zombie tales are today. Think of it as the disaster movie of its time with this one on the comic end.

LibriVox audiobook - The Swoop! by P.G. WodehouseThe Swoop!
By P.G. Wodehouse; Read by Kristin Hughes
17 Zipped MP3s or Podcast – Approx. 2 Hours [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: LibriVox.org
Published: August 2008
The Swoop! tells of the simultaneous invasion of England by several armies — “England was not merely beneath the heel of the invader. It was beneath the heels of nine invaders. There was barely standing-room.” (ch. 1) — and features references to many well-known figures of the day, among them the politician Herbert Gladstone, novelist Edgar Wallace, actor-managers Seymour Hicks and George Edwardes, and boxer Bob Fitzsimmons.

Podcast feed:

http://librivox.org/bookfeeds/the-swoop-by-p-g-wodehouse.xml

Posted by Jesse Willis

Radio Drama Revival – F. Paul Wilson’s Slasher

SFFaudio Online Audio

Radio Drama RevivalThe Radio Drama Revival, and its host Fred Greenhalgh, have a podcast interview with they guys behind The Grist Mill, a series of horror audio dramas. Their latest production is an adaptation of an F. Paul Wilson short story called Slasher. Have a listen |MP3| to the interview, that has samples from the production within it. You can subscribe to the podcast feed via this link:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/RadioDramaRevival

Posted by Jesse Willis